Prognostic Serum Biomarkers of Inflammaging in Patients Undergoing Emergency Laparotomy

Author:

George Michael12ORCID,Mukherjee Rajarshi12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Liverpool EmerGenT Academy, Department of Emergency General and Major Trauma Surgery, Aintree University Hospital, Liverpool University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust, Lower Lane, Liverpool L9 7AL, UK

2. Institute of Systems, Molecular & Integrative Biology, University of Liverpool, Biosciences Building, Crown Street, Liverpool L69 7BE, UK

Abstract

Surgeons are increasingly faced with an ageing and frail patient population. There is a significant absence of biomarkers capable of risk stratifying patients undergoing emergency laparotomy. Inflammaging describes a state of chronic inflammation associated with ageing and frailty that may predict worse outcomes after surgery. This retrospective observational study evaluated pre-morbid inflammatory markers in the prognostication of older adult patients undergoing emergency laparotomy. Patients aged ≥65 years undergoing surgery between 1 April 2017 and 1 April 2022 were identified. Pre-admission and acute C-reactive protein (CRP), erythrocyte sedimentation rate (ESR), total white cell count (WCC), neutrophil count (NC) and lymphocyte count (LC) datapoints were captured. Pre-operative risk stratification scores and post-operative outcomes were recorded using the National Emergency Laparotomy Audit (NELA) database. A cohort of 196 patients was included: 57.7% were female, median age 74.5 years. High risk (NELA risk of mortality ≥ 5%) and frail (clinical frailty scale ≥ 4) patients experienced a significantly longer hospital and critical care stay (p < 0.05). Pre-admission ESR ≥ 16 and LC ≥ 4.1 were significantly associated with a longer critical care stay (p < 0.05); no statistical significance was observed with CRP, WCC and NC in predicting adverse outcomes. We found that an elevated pre-morbid ESR and LC identifies a potential inflammaging cohort that demonstrates worse outcomes following emergency laparotomy. The prognostication of older adult surgical patients remains a challenge and represents an area of research deserving of future attention.

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Medicine (miscellaneous)

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